Deng4 [1] a Chinese family name [2] the name of an ancient state in today's Honan -chinalanguage.comStory of Deng
Front Page Story Page News Q&A About Us Weblog
Monuments Mingren Spotlight Search Surnames
Dang, Deng, Dun, Tang, T'en, Teng, Thean, Then, Theng, Thian and Thien are some of the names we use.
I searched the Web for people with the same name: Austrians, Dutch and Germans share Thien. Dang is a Vietnamese family name. Francis is from Sudan. His compatriot plays for UConn. Are Deng, Tang and Teng European surnames? Find out here. Teng interrupted his studies in cultural anthropology to draw and she earned her Ph.D. in East Asian Languages, specializing in Chinese colonial travel literature of the late imperial period. Geek of the week: Ansel scores a perfect Teng. Thean's research interests are centered on Active Galactic Nuclei, in particular the radio properties of Seyfert Galaxies. He had two good reasons to secure a business-method patent. Her mother’s demise focused Thien’s mind on what passing away entails. Chef Teng. Denglaw vs. Denglawyer. Tang talks (about politics). Embattled S.F. official Teng quits. A member of the French National Assembly! BeliaWanis MCA was established in 1992 under the leadership of Wanita MCA Chairperson, Dato’ Teng Gaik Kwan. The Assistant Minister for Environment & Food Industry. Dato Tang See Hang. A Toko Dun Yong in Amsterdam. A cognitive analysis of the Chinese room argument? His expert opinion on educational matters is often sought after by local media. The boss's wife proves a News Corp asset. A family feuds over an opera star's wealth. His Catholic faith, supported by a strong spiritual life, remained unshaken. Deng on PubMed. Featured game of the 1998 Cardoza US Masters.

Disclaimer: Excerpts and images belong to their respective owners.

I learned first hand other Chinese family surname have the same spelling.

Dang: "...dangs are totally different than dengs, but no harm done."

Thian: "...a mouth and a number ten on the inside." 田

Tang: "Errm, my surname is actually 'Dong'...I'm sure there are many other people whose dialect surname is 'Tang' but don't have 'Deng' as their Mandarin surname. Thanks a lot for linking me to your site."

Teng: "Our 'Teng' is 'Ding' or 'Ting' in Mandarin, the chinese character looks like a ' T ' with a hook at the bottom pointing towards the left and is not the same as yours...but this is not an issue I believe concerning your website."

Related: Alphabetical index of Chinese surnames

I am quite sure they share the same Chinese surnamesurname deng -ocrat.com via mirror site (the simplified Chinese character of Deng which looks like the number 713). She is an Olympics champion. She collaborated on this poster. He is famous for his calligraphy in Xing Shu style and Bang Shu style. 邓白,(1906—2003) He adhered to art education as his life-long career. In the 1920s, Deng was already active in the Guangdong art scene. He thinks E-business Faces Bottleneck in China. He has engaged, for a long term, in the clinical practice, scientific research and teaching in the field of Deng Yu-seninternal medicine. He is the former student, teacher and leader of the Guangzhou University of TCM. He is a Grandmaster of the Yang Style Tai Chi in Shanghai. 邓友梅 During the Second World War he was captured by the Japanese and forced to work in a factory in Japan (a converstation with him). Can Xue is not her real name. En 1959, Deng Yuhua termine ses études secondaires et veut poursuivre ses études pour devenir un jour professeur de musique. They played the roles of Cio-Cio San and Suzuki in Madama Butterfly. The year 1921 saw him at the First Meeting of Communist Representatives, which proclaimed the founding of the Chinese Communist Party. He was detained for attempting to organize another. He launched the "forest protection training courses" and trained a large number of professionals through out the country. He is the founding father of China's A-bomb. Secret agent and mistress of disguise.

鄧雨賢. Episode 27. Deng Yu-hsien's Music. Listen. (Episode 14. Hakka Rock 'n' Roll. In 1983, a classic Hakka song called Not Destined became well-known. Listen.) Deng Yuhsien Memorial Hall. Concert in Memory of Deng Yu-Hsien.

 

The Little Shepherd 100x81cm by Deng Nai Rong -bauhina.com

Unstained (175.4*89cm) 1984 by Deng Bai -www.hz.zj.cninfo.net

The Hakka Women: Deng Ming and His Paintings -chinatoday.com.cn

Zhong Kui Snatching the Little Demons Dated 1926, hanging scroll, ink and colour on paper, 123.5 x 58.2 cm  by Deng Fen (1892 - 1963) -Hong Kong Museum of Art
The Little Shepherd (100x81cm) by Deng Nai Rong 邓乃荣

Unstained (175.4*89cm) 1984 by Deng Bai 邓白

The Hakka Women -Deng Ming and His Paintings Zhong Kui Snatching the Little Demons, 123.5 x 58.2 cm by Deng Fen (1892 - 1963)
 
Deng surname is listed under 180. Do you have a copy of clan genealogy? "The Shanghai Library houses 12,000 titles of Chinese family histories in nearly 100,000 volumes, offering information on kinships relating to such personages as Confucius,".

Update: City library builds world's biggest Chinese family tree

How many people surnamed Deng are there in China? "The number of the Chinese in the third category of 10 major surnames make up just about 10% of the population: Xie, He, Xu, Song, Shen, Luo, Han, Deng, Liang and Ye." Wang is number one.

Evolution: "Deng developed in its origin place, Henan. During the Warring States period in the Qin and Han Dynasty, Deng spread to Sichuan, Shanxi, Guangdong and Jiangsu. During the end of the Western Jin period, it spread to Gansu and Fujian. Coming to the Ming Dynasty, the Dengs moved to Taiwan. They are mainly located in Nanyang, Anding, Gaomi, Xinye, Luling, Guangan, Yiyang, Nanan, Chenggu, Pingyang, Changsha, Chenjun and Anhua."

Taiwan Genealogy Online

Surnames Used in China Falling to 4,000. "It means more than 80 percent of Chinese surnames have disappeared over the past 6,000 years when over 24,000 surnames were in use."

Deng Surname Totem

Deng surname totem. 邓闭敦


Declared Monuments of New Territories

16. Kun Lung Gate Tower. Kun Lung Wai (San Wai), Lung Yeuk Tau, Fanling, New Territories. Photo by Leisure and Cultural Services Department 20. Yi Tai Study Hall. Shui Tau Village, Kam Tin, Yuen Long, New Territories. Photo by Leisure and Cultural Services Department 22. Entrance Tower of Ma Wat Wai. Ma Wat Wai, Lung Yeuk Tau, Fanling, New Territories. Photo by Leisure and Cultural Services Department
Kun Lung Gate Tower. Kun Lung Wai, presently known as San Wai, is one of the eleven Tang villages in Lung Yeuk Tau, Fanling. Although this village was reportedly settled by members of the Tang clan during the 14th century, the walls of San Wai were believed built in 1744 as the stone lintel above the main entrance to the village is engraved with 'Kun Lung, dated this Jiazi of the Qianlong reign'. Yi Tai Study Hall. Yi Tai Study Hall is situated at Shui Tau Village, Yuen Long. It was built by the Tang clan of Kam Tin who came to settle in this fertile plain as far back as the 11th century. According to local legends, Yi Tai Study Hall was built towards the end of Daoguang reign (1821-1850) to accommodate the two immortals, Man Cheong and Kwan Tai Tower of Ma Wat Wai. Ma Wat Wai was built by the Tang lineage during the Qianlong reign (1736-1795) of the Qing Dynasty. It is one of the renowned Five Wais (walled villages) and Six Tsuens (villages) in the area of Lung Yeuk Tau in Fanling.
     
26. Entrance Tower and the Enclosing Walls of Lo Wai. Lo Wai, Lung Yeuk Tau, Fanling, New Territories. Photo by Leisure and Cultural Services Department 27. Tang Chung Ling Ancestral Hall. Lung Yeuk Tau, Fanling. Photo by Leisure and Cultural Services Department 29. King Law Ka Shuk Ancestral Hall. Tai Po Tau Tsuen, Tai Po, New Territories. Photo by Leisure and Cultural Services Department
Tower of Lo Wai. Lo Wai is the first built of the five renowned walled villages in Lung Yeuk Tau, Fanling established by the Tang clan whose ancestors branched out from the main Tang settlement in Kam Tin in the 13th century. The Tangs since then established eleven villages in the area, known as 'Five Wais (Walled villages) and Six Tsuens (Villages)'. Tang Chung Ling Ancestral Hall. Situated to the northwest at the foot of Lung Shan, Fanling, Tang Chung Ling Ancestral Hall is one of the largest ancestral halls in Hong Kong. Evidence suggest that the original building dates from 1525 to honour the founding ancestor, Tang Chung Ling (1302-1387) and has since then been the main ancestral hall of the Lung Yeuk Tau lineage. King Law Ka Shuk Ancestral Hall. King Law Ka Shuk was once used as a study hall, but been serving as the ancestral hall of the Tang clan in Tai Po Tau for over one hundred years. It is believed that the building was built by the thirteenth generation ancestors Tang Yuen-wan, Tang Mui-kei and Tang Nim Fung in the Ming Dynasty to commemorate their tenth generation ancestor Tang King-law.

Walled villages of Hong Kong: "Kat Hing Wai (吉慶圍) is a famous Punti walled village in Yuen Long District of Hong Kong. It often mistakenly believed to be Hakka, whose people have similar traditions. However the Punti people were from Southern China and the first to settle in Hong Kong. Kat Hing Wai's residents speak Cantonese, rather than Hakka. Popularly known as Kam Tin, from the name of the area, it is home to about 400 descendants of the Tang Clan, who built the village back in the 1600s."

Emperor and Ancestor. State and Lineage in South China. Book preview
The Incredible Journey of Yuen Long, Tang Ancestral Hall, Ping Shan, Yuen Long

Schools and hospital named after members of the Tang clan in Hong Kong: Tang Shiu Kin's Sheng Kung Hui secondary school, Victoria Government Secondary School and hospital. Tang Pui King Memorial College. Tang King Po's school and college.

Mainland China

 
Deng Ancestral Temple
 
Wuhua Ancestral Temple (original photo)
 

Wuhua, Meizhou, Guangdong Province, China

 

The Memorial Hall of General Deng Shichang & Haizhu Museum

 

2 Longxianli, Baogang Avenue, Haizhu District, Guangzhou (510220). Source:english.gz.gov.cn

Brick engravings unearthed in 1958 in Deng County, Henan Province.

Ladies on an excursion Phoenix
Ladies on  an excursion (brick engraving) -china-window.com Phoenix (brick engraving) -china-window.com
Southern Dynasties, length 38 cm, width 19 cm, thickness 6.3 cm Southern Dynasties, length 38.7 cm, width 18.9 cm, thickness 6.3 cm

Resource: Dengzhou | National Museum of Chinese History | China Culture & Relics Newspaper | National Palace Museum | The Palace Museum | Declared Monuments in New Territories | Archaelogy in China | Emperor and Ancestor | National Digital Cultural Network | NDAP | Dengzhou


Famous People in History

Deng Man Hou.

The twenty second King of the Shang Dynasty (°Ó´Â 1783BC to 1135BC) was Shang King Wu Ding (°ÓªZ¤B¤ý) who reigned from 1324BC to 1275BC. Shang King Wu Ding and gave his uncle named Zi Man (¤l°Ò) the authority to administer a district called Deng (¾H present day Deng Xian ¾H¿¤ in Henan province ªe«n¬Ù). Shang King Wu Ding awarded upon his uncle the hereditary title of Hou («J) or Marquis. As the district was called Deng, Shang King Wu Ding bestowed upon his uncle the surname of Deng. Zi Man was then known as Deng Man Hou. Deng Man Hou had a son by the name of Chao (®Ð) whom he surnamed Deng. From then on all his descendants inherited the surname Deng.

In 1122BC Zhou King Wu (©PªZ¤ý) destroyed the Shang Dynasty (°Ó´Â 1783BC to 1122BC) and established the Zhou Dynasty (©P´Â 1134BC to 256BC). During that time the ruler of Deng was Deng Zhong (¾H©¾) who was the seventh ruler of Deng district. Zhou King Wu rewarded him the hereditary title of Hou for his loyalty to the Zhou Court. The rank of the title was the same as that during the preceding Shang Dynasty. Distrct of Deng was upgraded to Statehood which was then known as the State of Deng (¾H°ê).

Source: Hakka surname THIEN

Deng Yu (25-220 A.D.). "My 47th generation ancestor Deng Yu was a renowned general in the Eastern Han period (25AD to 220 AD) and there is a biography of him in 16th scroll of Eastern Han Canon of History. According to our genealogy, he had 3 wives and 13 sons, and lived to the age of 57."
Deng Clan Genealogy -http://www.oocities.org/Tokyo/3998/deng.htm
"It is said that Duke Deng Yu once lived in seclusion here during the reign of the Emperor Guangwu of the Eastern Han Dynasty, and as the highest official position Deng Yu took was the Commander-in-chief, the hill was called the Commander-in-chief Deng⦣128;™s Hill."
http://www.suzhou.gov.cn/English/Travel/18.shtml
 
"Dengsitu Temple situated on Dengwei Hill, Wu County, Jiangsu Province was used to offer sacrifices to Deng Yu of the Eastern Han Dynasty. Inside the temple are four cypresses, respectively named "Qing" (clear), "Qi" (grotesque), "Gu" (ancient) and "Sheng" (holy). Cypresses of this kind are rarely seen elsewhere."
Scenic Spots in Suzhou -http://www.seu.edu.cn/EC/english/jssz.htm

邓禹 Deng Yu (2-58): http://www.ndcnc.gov.cn/datalib/2001/MartialCyclopaedic/DL/DL-3122/

"Deng Sui (鄧綏) (AD 81 - 121), formally Empress Hexi (和熹皇后, literally "the moderate and pacifying empress") was an empress during Han Dynasty. She was Emperor He's second wife. She later, as empress dowager, served as regent for his son Emperor Shang and nephew Emperor An, and was regarded as an able and diligent administrator. She was perhaps the last effective ruler of the Eastern Han Dynasty, as the subsequent emperors and empresses dowager were largely incompetent rulers. During her regency, there were natural disasters and wars with Xiongnu and Qiang, but she was able to remedy the disasters and largely quell the wars. She was also praised for her attention to criminal justice.

Deng Sui was born in 81. Her father Deng Xun (鄧訓) was a son of Emperor Guangwu's prime minister Deng Yu. Her mother, Lady Yin, was a daughter of a cousin of Emperor Guangwu's wife Empress Yin Lihua. She was selected to be in the palace in 95, and she became a consort to Emperor He in 96. She was 15, and he was 17."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empress_Deng_Sui

Deng Mengnu 鄧猛女 (116-150 AD),Empress of Emperor Huan of Later Han. "Daughter of Deng Xiang and his wife Xuan, whose maiden surname is unknown, the Lady Deng was selected into the harem of Emperor Huan in 153 or 154; she was at that time probably thirteen sui, the most common age for such entry, and was therefore born about 141. First appointed a Chosen Woman, lowest of the three ranks of imperial concubines, she was extremely beautiful, she attracted the attention and favours of the emperor, and she was swiftly promoted to be an Honoured Lady, highest rank below the empress."

"The Lady's father Deng Xiang was a great-nephew of the Empress-Dowager Deng. The family had been respected and powerful in Nanyang commandery, the southwest of present-day Henan, for many generations and Deng Xiang's ancestor Deng Yu was a leading supporter of the founding Emperor Guangwu of Later Han."
Ladies of the Court of Emperor Huan of Han: http://www.anu.edu.au/asianstudies/decrespigny/huan.html
"Deng Ai, a talented strategist (197-264 A.D.). He styled himself Shizai. He was from Jiyang, Yiyang Prefecture (northeast of the Xinye County, Henan Province today). He was a famous military general of the Wei State of the period of the Three Kingdoms, who helped the Simashi fight east and west and made great merits."
Famous Persons of Henan Province -http://china-window.com/Henan_w/culture/minrene.htm
"In the 260s, after the Sima family had established control of the government of Wei, they planned the attack on Shu-Han. In the autumn of 263 they captured the passes into Hanzhong, and while one army held Jiang Wei in the northwest, the general Deng Ai went forward against Chengdu. In the winter, after victory in one pitched battle, he received the surrender of Liu Shan. There was a brief period of intrigue and confusion as Deng Ai was dismissed and then assassinated, while Jiang Wei and a rebel commander of Wei, Zhong Hui, sought to establish an independent position, but the plotters were killed, and in the summer of 264 Liu Shan was received into honoured exile at Luoyang."
The Three Kingdoms and Western Jin. A history of China in the Third Century AD: http://www.anu.edu.au/asianstudies/decrespigny/3KWJin.html

邓艾 Deng Ai: http://www.ndcnc.gov.cn/datalib/2001/MartialCyclopaedic/DL/DL-3106/

 
Deng Yu. (1337-1377). "Deng Yu's Tomb lies on the western Dengfushan Hills, outside Zhonghuamen Gate, Nanjing, Jiangsu, Pr., China. It was built in 1378 (the 10th year of Emperor Zhu Hongwu of the Ming Dynasty). Born in: Hongxian County, Anhui Pr. in the Ming. Career: In his early years, he joined in Zhu Yuanzhang's insurrectionary army and repeatedly performed outstanding service. In 1377, he withdrew his troops back to the imperial court from the Kunlun Mountain, and while he was passing by Shouchun County, Anhui Pr., he died of sickness at the age of forty-one. Afterwards, he was awarded the title "King of Ninghe" and the posthumous title "Wushun" by the emperor."
Deng Yu's Tomb -http://www.chinaart-6.com.cn/home/chinese%20p/wenwu/mu/dengyumu/dengyumu-e.htm

邓愈 Deng Yu: http://www.ndcnc.gov.cn/datalib/2001/MartialCyclopaedic/DL/DL-3123/

 
Deng Tingzhen 邓廷桢 (1775-1846). "Economic and social dilemmas raised by the opium trade prompted a number of Qing officials to memorialize the throne on this question. What ensued was a carefully reasoned examination of China's existing opium laws. Some memorialists believed that Opium should be legalized and paid for with trading goods. While China developed domestic sources for the drug to diminish reliance on imports, European traders could at least be forced to pay duty on shipments from abroad. Other memorialists advocated a "War on drugs" with strict prohibitions designed to dry up the supply of the drug and discourage its domestic marketing and use.
One advocate of legalization was Xu Naiji (1777-1839), an 1809 jinshi from Renhe County, Zhejiang, who had served as circuit intendant (daotai) at Canton. In the spring of 1836, while he was serving as a sub-director of the Court of Sacrificial Worship in Peking, Xu addressed his ideas to the throne in a memorial that remains controversial even today. In the memorial, reproduced below, he admitted the evil effects of opium but argued for a process of legalization whose end result would have been the elimination of silver outflow and the dominant foreign role in the trade. The Daoguang emperor seemed to lean toward Xu's proposal but remanded it with a terse edict to Deng Tingzhen, the governor of Guang-dong and Guangxi, for his consideration."
The First Clash with the West: http://www.isop.ucla.edu/eas/restricted/legal.htm
"The Imperial Commissioner responsible for leading the crackdown on opium, Lin Zexu, and the Governor of Guangdong and Guangxi, Deng Tingzhen, stayed in this temple on their inspection tour of Macau in 1839, and received Portuguese officials here."
http://www3.icm.gov.mo/gate/gb/www.icm.gov.mo/Heritage/Tour/CHPointE.asp?N=2&R=B

Movie: Yapian zhanzheng (1997)

Deng Shichang -epicbook.comDeng Shichang 邓世昌 (1849-1894), renowned captain of the 2,300-ton cruiser Chih Yuan which was torpedoed off the coast of Chengshantou during the "Battle of the Yellow Sea" on 17 September 1894. A movie entitled "The Naval Battle of 1894" was produced by Changchun Studio to depict this spectacular sea battle. His ancestral home is known to be in Panyu, Guangdong.

Photo: http://www.epicbook.com/history/densichang.html
Beiyang Navy:
http://www.beiyang.org/mrt/dsc.htm

"The Yellow Sea Naval Battle during the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-1895 (launched by Japanese imperialism to annex Korea and invade China) happened on the sea 10 sea miles off the coast of Chengshantou. The patriotic general of Beiyang Navy of the Qing Dynasty, Deng Shichang, died in this battle on 17 September 1894. One corrupt Chinese official had used ammunition funds for personal use. As a result, shells ran out for the some of the warships during battle such that one navy commander, Deng Shichang, resorted to ramming the enemy's ship. Deng, captain of the 2,300-ton cruiser Chih Yuan, and his crew's fate was sealed when their vessel was hit by a torpedo during the Battle of the Yellow Sea, the first full-scale confrontation between two national fleets of ironclads in modern times. The then emperor, Guang Xu, wrote a lament for him, and the tomb with the inscription are still in Shihuangdi Temple."

http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/china/shichang.htm

邓世昌 Deng Shichang: http://www.ndcnc.gov.cn/datalib/2001/MartialCyclopaedic/DL/DL-3116/

Deng Yingchao 鄧穎超. Wade-Giles romanization Teng Ying-ch'ao (b. Feb. 4, 1904, Guangshan [Kuang-shan] county, Henan [Honan], China - d. July 11, 1992, Beijing, China), Chinese politician; wife of Zhou Enlai. Her commitment to expanding women's rights was manifested early in life when she joined the movement to abolish the custom of binding women's feet. She took part in the May Fourth Movement (1917-21), a revolution by young intellectuals aimed at preserving Chinese culture in the wake of Japanese encroachment. When she was 15, she joined the Awakening Society, a liberal student movement headed by Zhou, and was arrested for her radical activities. She joined the Communist Party in 1924.

http://rulers.org/indexd2.html
The Zhou Enlai-Deng Yingchao Memorial Hall in Tianjin -
http://www.online.tj.cn/zhel/zhelmain.htm
Memorial to Zhou Enlai and Deng Yingchao -
http://www.mzhoudeng.com/

 

Deng Xiao-ping, 18 September 1953-19 June 1954 Vice Premier, State Council and Minister of FinanceDeng Xiaoping 邓小平(1904-1997).

"Plant trees everywhere and make our country green in the interest of future generations." http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/dengxp/vol3/text/c1070.html

Selected Works of Deng Xiaoping. http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/dengxp/

"It doesn't matter if a cat is black or white, as long as it catches mice." http://www.time.com/time/deng/thoughts.html

"By boldly repudiating Maoism and masterminding epochal economic reforms in China, Deng Xiaoping improved the lives of far more people than any other leader -- anytime, anywhere." http://www.asiaweek.com/asiaweek/97/0307/cs6.html

Deng Xiaoping and the fate of the Chinese Revolution 12 March 1997. http://www.wsws.org/history/1997/mar1997/dengx.shtml


Spotlight

Deng Tuo (1912-1966).Deng Tuo 邓拓 (1912-1966).
"The tension between service to politics and service to culture was ultimately disasterous for Deng and for China's revolution: his ghost haunts the halls of power in Beijing today."
http://www.oup-usa.org/isbn/0198290667.html

Photo: All-China Journalists Association. More images of Deng Tuo

Propaganda and Culture in Mao's China Deng Tuo and the Intelligentsia. By Timothy Cheek: Book preview.

A Provincial Scholar Turns to National Revolution

During an abortive rebellion in his home town of Fuzhou in 1933 the subject of this biography changed his name to Deng Tuozhou. He is now known by the shortened version Deng Tuo. The personal name means 'open up the continent'. At the time, Deng told a friend that he thought Fujian was too restricted a place and that they ought to go into the raging storm beyond the province.

Family and Schooling

Deng Tuo was born in Fuzhou, Fujian province on the south-east coast of China. By the 1920's, when Deng Tuo was a teenager, Fuzhou was a moderately active port of some 600.000 people. The house in which Deng Tuo was born and raised still survives, It is a traditional-style complex in an extended U shaped within courtyard walls. It lies on the north-eastern lower slopes of Wushi Hill, one of the major hills and parks in the south-western corner of this hilly city.

A Private Ceremony to Mourn Deng Tuo, Wu Han, Liao Mosha and Liu Ren. Mary G. Mazur

On 17 May 1996, in a crypt of Babaoshan cemetery in Beijing, a private memorial was held by Ding Yilan to commemorate the deaths in the Cultural Revolution of her husband Deng Tuo, Liu Ren, Wu Han, and later Liao Mosha. The date was the 30th anniversary of the opening of the Cultural Revolution and the suicide death of Deng Tuo.

In September of 1961, together with Deng Tuo and Liao Mosha he started ⦣128;œNotes from the Three-family Village⦣128; in the journal of ⦣128;œFront⦣128;. http://www.cnzj.org.cn/english/mthc/zgmr/wh.htm

"Deng Tuo, Wu Han, Liao Mo-Sha, Three from the same family. Anti-Party, Anti-Chairman Mao. The Three Family Village Is a revisionist Black family. While speaking these lines, I was to stamp my right foot on the platform and point my finger at three of my classmates who were playing Deng, Wu, and Liao. " http://communication.ucsd.edu/bjones/RedMirror/authorz.intro.html

"Beijing cultural boss Deng Tuo employed calligraphy to form bridges to both the conservative painter Qi Baishi and the radical politician Kang Sheng." http://tsquare.tv/film/Brushes1.html

"Around the black and white photos and graphics in his new books, Li built up the stories of four renowned Chinese intellectuals: Liang Sicheng (1901-72), the famous Chinese architect who participated in the design of the United Nations building in New York; Lao She (1899-1966), one of the 20th century's greatest Chinese novelists and playwrights; Deng Tuo (1912-66), a prominent journalist and editor; and Huang Yongyu (1924-), a renowned Chinese painter." http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/cndydb/2001/01/d9-1book.104.html

"Famed historian Deng Tuo (1912-66) once said Ma created a new type of woman character for Chinese opera - shuaidan - an aged woman supreme commander." http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/cndydb/2001/01/d9-3ma.108.html

Deng Tuo on chinasuntv (November 17-18, 2007)

Deng Jiaxian, who devoted his youth to the construction of China's nuclear defense force, made great contributions to the development of China's atom and hydrogen bombs.-People's Daily photoDeng Jiaxian 邓稼先 (1924-1986). "Deng Jiaxian, who devoted his youth to the construction of China's nuclear defense force, made great contributions to the development of China's atom and hydrogen bombs." http://202.99.23.245/english/199908/31/enc_19990831001032_HomeNews.html

"As a young man, Mr. Deng studied in America. After he finished studying and returned to China, he dedicated his whole life to the strength and development of his motherland." http://www.ustc.edu.cn/chinese/communion/iao/special/ewstk.htm

Deng Jiaxian's memorial: http://www.snian.com/memorials/1988/deng/index.shtml

Deng Yuzhi (Cora). "Deng⦣128;™s career spanned most of the 20th century. Serving first as a student secretary in Changhsa in the early 1920s, the national staff in Shanghai convinced her to join the industrial department in 1930. The industrial programmes she developed brought the YWCA recognition from both the Nationalists and the Communists, China's two competing political factions." http://www.worldywca-org.ac.psiweb.com/common_concern/june 2000/China.html cached

Deng YandaDeng Yanda.邓演达 (b. 1895, Huiyang, Guangdong, China - d. Nov. 29, 1931, Nanjing, Jiangsu, China), civil governor of Hubei (1926-27). He was a regiment commander in the revolutionary-minded Guangdong army. In 1924, he was appointed chief dean of the Huangpu Military College (whose president was Chiang Kai-shek) and president of the Chaozhou-Shantou branch of that college. He also participated in the Northern Expedition, being the director of the political department of the northbound army. In 1927, Chiang, leader of the Kuomintang rightists and of the whole government, started to strike the Chinese Communist Party, despite the policy of late president Sun Yat-sen, who preferred a close relationship with both the CCP and the U.S.S.R. Chiang also persecuted KMT leftists like Deng who maintained Sun's policy. Deng was arrested on Nov. 17, 1931, in Shanghai, and subsequently executed.
http://rulers.org/indexd2.html

The Chinese Peasants and Workers Democratic Party (CPWDP) was founded in 1930 by Mr. Deng Yanda. Among the principal founders and leaders of the Party are Huang Qixiang, Zhang Bojun, Peng Zemin, Ji Fang, Zhou Gucheng, Lu Jiaxi and Jiang Zhenghua.
http://www.cppcc.gov.cn/English/brief_intro_non_comm/200702140130.htm

"Director of the General Political Department of the Northern Expedition, a leader of the left Guomindang, and an opponent of Chiang Kai-shek. In July 1927 he resigned from the Wuhan Government in protest against its decision to expel the Communists. He was arrested and executed by Chiang Kai-shek in 1931 because of his launching of the Third Party and his activities against Chiang's Nanjing Government."
http://www.zhongguo.org/docs/zhengchaolin/zheng2.htm

"Right after the writing of these words, he locked up Hu Hanmin, one of the founding fathers of the KMT, at Tan Shan and then ordered the execution of Deng Yanda, one of his colleagues in the steering committee of Huangpu Military School." ("Old warlords such as Li Fuying and Shi Yusan were executed and probably deserved their fates; but the punishments lashed at Deng Qi due to the big fire in Changsha and at Cheng Zerun due to the suicide of a draftee outside of Chongqing were probably too harsh, and complaints can be heard about these two cases till today.")
http://weekly.china-forum.org/CCF95/ccf9518-1.html

http://etc.hzu.edu.cn/151/dyd/

Deng Zihui"Deng Zihui 邓子恢 (b. Aug. 1896 d. Dec. 10, 1972) had no choice but to try to personally persuade Mao to oppose the project. He told Mao that he basically agreed with the measures for flood control. But rather than build the large dam at the Three Gate Gorge, he argued that during the First Five-Year Plan [1953-57], the government should build two reservoirs at Zhichuan and Mang hill hear Luoyang."
http://www.probeinternational.org/tgp/index.cfm?DSP=content&ContentID=9428

The Politics of Agricultural Cooperativization in China. Mao, Deng Zihui and the "High Tide" of 1955. By Frederick C. Teiwes, Warren Sun, Hongyi Lai. Book preview

"Fearful of widespread peasant discontent as farmholdings were forcibly collectivized, Agriculture Minister Deng Zihui ordered a halt. An enraged Mao reviled the vice-premier as "a woman with bound feet." http://www.asiaweek.com/asiaweek/magazine/99/0924/cn_economy.html

"Deng was called a rightist after this, he had to make a self-criticism, and he was not elected to the Politburo as he surely would have been otherwise, but he remained a vice-premier." http://nias.ku.dk/Nytt/Regional/EastAsia/Articles/maodoc.html

Deng ZihuiApparently Deng Zihui and the Rural Work Department insisted on the original plan, and proceeded (with the endorsement of a Politburo meeting convened under Liu Shaoqi) to "contract" about twenty thousand cooperatives back to the stage of Mutual Aid teams. Infuriated by this show of resistance (and by the rumor that two hundred thousand cooperatives had been dismantled), Mao convened a meeting...

http://content.cdlib.org/xtf/view?docId=ft3q2nb24q&chunk.id=d0e950&doc.view=print

Marxists Internet Archive Photo GalleryDeng Zhongxia 邓中夏(1894-1933). "Deng, like most of the leaders of the labor movement during the mid-1920s in south China, was from an intellectual, rather than a working-class, background. His politicization during the May Fourth period was representative of a general trend toward social and political radicalism among young intellectuals in search of solutions for China's problems."

http://www.washington.edu/uwpress/marxist.html.

Marxist Intellectuals and the Chinese Labor Movement. A Study of Deng Zhongxia (1894-1933). By Daniel Y. K. Kwan. Book preview

http://www.china--1.com/z_kuozang/lisiday/07/0701/gcd2/2-062.htm

Deng Sanmu 邓散木(1898-1963). Deng was one of old Shanghai⦣128;™s most popular calligraphers and colourful eccentrics. He was admired for his bold brushwork, for his ability to make his characters seem to float on the paper and for the strength of his seal-carving. In 1958, he was branded as a right-winger and banished to the fringes of society. Deng sent this poem to a friend in 1958...He marked the occasion by signing himself 'Happy old Shit', a term he had not used since 1949.
http://www.fathom.com/course/21701734/session2.html
http://www.9610.com/jindai/dengsanmu/

 

Deng Zhen, former Si Chuan Provence Professional Team Member The Chinese character of Deng in their traditional (Big5) and simplified (GB) forms.

Using search engines to find them: AltaVista, Baidu, Google, Sina, Sogou and Yahoo.

Looking at images on Altavista, Baidu, Google (GB or Big5) and Sogou.

(Photo: Wushu Team Head Coach: Deng Zhen.
See him in
action.)

 
xing4 sheng1 sing3 siang5 [1] one's family name; surname [2] [n] clan; people; family -chinalanguage.comxing4 sheng1 sing3 siang5 [1] one's family name; surname [2] [n] clan; people; family -chinalanguage.com (see etymology).

The Origin of Chinese Surnames. According to legends, Chinese surnames originated from the Emperor Fu Xi (2852BC). He standardized all Chinese surnames and defined matrimonial relationship. Thus a proper system of population census was established. It was also believed that there is a close relationship between surnames and totem worship; the early Chinese adopted the names or symbols of certain animals as their surname (e.g. Long (2) which means dragon.)

.China issues 1st set of stamps on family names. This set of special stamps features a red Chinese knot, which symbolizes unity and luck, in the center and a totem design of the surname. On each of the 128 stamps is printed a different family name.

Chinese surname history: Wang . One of the current biggest surnames in China, families surnamed Wang are the descendants of monarchs. One can know from historical records that Wang families are the "offspring of kings", namely, the descendants of monarchs. Wang means the king or the ruler.

The origin of Chinese Surnames. The Chinese have had surnames long before the period of the Three Emperors and Five Kings, that is, during the time when recognition was given only to one's mother and not one's father. Hence, the Chinese character for surname is made up of two individual characters----one meaning woman and one meaning to give birth. That is to say, the surnames of the early Chinese followed the maternal line. Before the three dynasties of Xia, Shang and Zhou (2140-256 BC), the people in China were already having surnames (Xing) and clan-names (Shi).

Deng is a Chinese family surname and the name of an ancient state in today's Henan Province, China.
(
Dengzhou, Nanyang, Henan Province)

Chinese surnames with the same spelling as ours

[1] [v] supervise; oversee; rectify; correct [2] short for directors (as a board of directors, etc.) [3] a Chinese family name -chinalanguage.com

1] 4th celestial stem [2] population [3] attendants [4] fourth; grade D [5] small cubes of meat or vegetable [6] a Chinese family name -chinalanguage.com

[1] [n] agricultural land; field; cultivated land; arable land; rice field [2] [v] hunt game [3] a Chinese family name [4] Kangxi radical 102 -chinalanguage.com

[1] name of a state in the Spring and Autumn period in today's Shantung province [2] a Chinese family name -chinalanguage.com

[1] the Tang dynasty; Chinese [2] a Chinese family name [3] abrupt; rude; preposterous; impertinent [4] Chinese; of China (Hakka) -chinalanguage.com

1] hot water [2] soup; broth [3] a Chinese family name -chinalanguage.com

[1] [n] party; gang; faction; clique; association [2] relative [3] [n] community of 500 families [4] [v] take sides; associate; be a partizan [5] correct form of &#x[n] village; -chinalanguage.com
Dong,Tang... Ding,Teng,Thien.. Tian,Thean, Thian.,Thien... Teng,Tang... Tang,Tong... Tang,Tong... Dang,Zhang, Dong,Tong...

Resource: Chinese Surnames | The Hundred Families Surnames | The Origin of Chinese Surnames | Origin of Chinese Surnames | Chinese Characters and Culture | Dictionary of Chinese Characters | Sa Tdiu Gok Hak Ga Miong Zap | Ancestry.com | FamilySearch.org | Rootsweb.com | Netor.com | Greatchinese | Taiwan Genealogy Online | 10000xing | Hundred Names | Village DB

 

Father: Frank Thien Yun Thau (1920-1973)Father: Frank Thien Yun Thau (1920-1973)

thienwp@yahoo.com 邓伟鹏 鄧偉鵬

Dedicated to mum

Front Page | Story Page | News | Q&A | About Us | Weblog